MA PhD
Personal Chair
- About
-
- Email Address
- r.millar@abdn.ac.uk
- Telephone Number
- +44 (0)1224 273909
- Office Address
- School/Department
- School of Language, Literature, Music and Visual Culture
Biography
Robert McColl Millar is Professor in Linguistics and Scottish Language. He has published widely on the interface between Gaelic and Scots in Northern Scots, lexical attrition in Modern Scots, rapid language change and its connection with attitudes in modern Scotland, language policy towards Scots, the connection between language standardisation and the development of the nation state and the sociology of language. His books include
System Collapse, System Rebirth: The Demonstrative Systems of English 900-1350 and the Birth of the Definite Article (2000)
Language, Nation and Power (2005)
Northern and Insular Scots, (2007)
Authority and Identity: a Sociolinguistic History of Europe before the Modern Age (2010)
English Historical Sociolinguistics (2012)
Variation and Attrition in the Scottish Fishing Communities, with William Barras and Lisa Marie Bonnici (2014)
Contact: The Interaction of Closely Related Linguistic Varieties and the History of English (2016)
Modern Scots: an analytical survey (2018)
A Sociolinguistic History of Scotland (2020)
Trask's Historical Linguistics (2007, 2015, 2023)
A History of the Scots Language (2023)
He is Editor of Scottish Language, a member of the editorial board of English World-Wide and the Review of Scottish Studies, of the Steering Committee of the Angus McIntosh Centre for Historical Linguistics at the University of Edinburgh and a Trustee of Scots Language Dictionaries. He is also series editor for a refereed online series, Publications of the Forum for Research on the Languages of Scotland and Ulster. If you would like to propose a volume, please get in touch with him at the e-mail address above. He was Chair of the Forum for Research on the Languages of Scotland and Ulster from 2009 to 2017.
Over the last fifteen years, Professor Millar has supervised over 25 successful doctoral theses, ranging from language teaching, through language contact to the use of language in eighteenth century Scotland.
Qualifications
- MA English Language and Literature1987 - University of Glasgow
- PhD English Historical Linguistics1991 - University of London
Memberships and Affiliations
- Internal Memberships
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Robert McColl Millar jointly coordinates research in Language and Linguistics.
- External Memberships
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Robert McColl Millar is the Editor of the Chair of the Forum for Research on the Languages of Scotland and Ulster's innovative on-line Publications series. He is also Editor of Scottish Language. He was Chair of the Forum for Research on the Languages of Scotland and Ulster from 2009 to 2017.
He is a member of the editorial board of English World-Wide, a Trustee of Scottish Language Dictionaries and a member of the board of the Angus McIntosh Centre for Historical Linguistics at the University of Edinburgh.
Latest Publications
Scottish English
The Oxford Handbook of British Englishes. Montgomery, C., Moore, E. (eds.). Oxford Univerity Press; OxfordChapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: ChaptersLinguistic Contact and Language Change
Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. 218 pagesBooks and Reports: BooksA History of the Scots Language
Oxford Univerity Press; Oxford, Oxford. 196 pagesBooks and Reports: BooksTrask's Historical Linguistics, 4th edition
Routledge, London. 410 pagesBooks and Reports: Books- [ONLINE] DOI: https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003125136
- [ONLINE] Book at publisher's site
Doric: the Scots dialect spoken by the Queen: what it sounds like and where it comes from
Contributions to Specialist Publications
- Research
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Research Overview
Robert McColl Millar is an historical linguist, dialectologist and socioliogist of language, working both on Scotland and beyond.
Current Research
Professor Millar has a long-standing interest in the ways in which the languages of Europe have gained full literate expression. He is also continuing work on close-relative contact, reassessing his discussion of the development of Shetland Scots.
From 2008-11 he was principal investigator for a major grant from the Arts and Humanities Research Council for aproject to investigate lexical change in the dialects of the Scottish fishing communities. The first book related to this project, Variation and Attrition in the Scottish Fishing Communities, was published in May 2014.
He has also been working on the language of letters to and from convicts transported to New South Wales in the first half of the nineteenth century. The corpus is comprised of letters to and from Thomas Holden and from Richard Taylor.
In 2007 he was asked to write an introduction to a new printing of Hugh Marwick's Orkney Norn. This publication now appears to have been abandoned, so the introduction is available here.
In late May 2018 he gave a lecture entitled Scots as a Sociolinguistic Entity at the University of Giessen. The attached represents some suggested references and readings.
In this document can be found a full transcription and translation of 'Donald's letter', as discussed in A Sociolinguistic History of Scotland.
At present he is completing a book on language contact and language change for Cambridge University Press and writing (with Dawn Leslie) a volume on the Dialects of Scots for Edinburgh University Press.
- Teaching
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Teaching Responsibilities
I will be teaching on the following courses in Half Session 1 of 2024-2025:
LN1008 English Past and Present
LN2008 Language and Society
LN3030/LN4030 Historical (Socio)Linguistics
LN4012 Dissertation in Language and Linguistics
EL55C3 A Social and Textual History of the English Language
From until December, I will be available on Tuesdays and Thursdays. I will also regularly be available on a Wednesday
To find out my availability at a particular time, please consult
https://mccollmillar.youcanbook.me
You should sign up for a time on this site: this guarantees you will be expected and that you won't have to wait. If you would like to have an online consultation, let me know.
If you can't make any of these times, get in touch and we'll work something out.
- Publications
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Page 2 of 5 Results 11 to 20 of 44
Language and Nationalism in the Nineteenth Century: Nynorsk and Scots in Comparative Context
Scandinavica, vol. 55, no. 2, pp. 6-42Contributions to Journals: Articles- [ONLINE] View publication in Scopus
Contact: The Interaction of Closely Related Linguistic Varieties and the History of English
Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh. 224 pagesBooks and Reports: BooksDialect death? The present state of the dialects of the Scottish fishing community
Current trends in Historical Sociolinguistics. Russi, C. (ed.). de Gruyter Open, pp. 143-164, 22 pagesChapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters- [ONLINE] DOI: https://doi.org/10.1515/9783110488401-010
At the forefront of linguistic change: the noun phrase morphology of the Lindisfarne Gospels
The Old English Gloss to the Lindisfarne Gospels: Language, Author and Context. Fernandez Cuesta, J., Pons-Sanz, S. M. (eds.). De Gruyter New York and Berlin, pp. 153-168, 16 pagesChapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters- [ONLINE] DOI: https://doi.org/10.1515/9783110449105-011
Trask's Historical Linguistics
Routledge, Abingdon. 391 pagesBooks and Reports: BooksTrask's historical linguistics
Taylor and Francis. 412 pagesBooks and Reports: Books- [ONLINE] DOI: https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315728056
- [ONLINE] View publication in Scopus
Lexical Variation and Attrition in the Scottish Fishing Communities
Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh. 200 pagesBooks and Reports: BooksChange in the Fisher Dialects of the Scottish East Coast: Peterhead as a Case Study
Sociolinguistics in Scotland. Lawson, R. (ed.). Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 241-257, 16 pagesChapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters‘“To bring my language near to the language of men”? Dialect and dialect use in the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries: some observations’
Scots: Studies in its Literature and Language. Kirk, J. M., Macleod, I. (eds.). Rodopi, pp. 73-87, 15 pagesChapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: ChaptersTerms for fish in the dialects of Scotland's east coast fishing communities: Evidence for lexical attrition
Scottish Language, vol. 30, pp. 29-59Contributions to Journals: Articles